Doug Liman Biography

Director and producer

Doug Liman

Born July 24, 1965, in New York, NY; son of Arthur L. (an attorney) and
Ellen (an artist) Liman.
Education:
Earned degree in history from Brown University, 1988; attended University
of Southern California.

Sidelights

Filmmaker Doug Liman made an impressive debut with a small independent
movie,
Swingers
, that was shot on a budget and went on to earn a small fortune. Since
then, Liman has been given increasingly large sums to make his movies,
which have been relatively few in number but major screen events
nonetheless, such as
The Bourne Identity
and
Mr. & Mrs. Smith
. He claimed that he was the black sheep among his siblings, one of whom
is a professor of neurobiology and the other the attorney who failed to
keep ImClone founder Sam Waksal out of jail for insider trading.
"At the end of the day, I'm still completely overshadowed by
Lewis and Emily," Liman told the
New York Post
about his brother and sister. "Before you get to the movie
section, you have to pass the business section."

Born in 1965, Liman grew up in a well-heeled Manhattan world thanks to his
father's lucrative career as an attorney. A highly regarded figure
in legal circles, Arthur L. Liman had a high-profile corporate clientele,
and during his son's college years served as chief counsel to the
U.S. Senate committee investigating the Iran-Contra affair. When Liman was
six years old, one of his father's clients, audiovisual equipment
maker Bell and Howell, gave the senior Liman a Super-8 camera as a
Christmas gift, which he then promptly passed on to his son. Liman was
thrilled by the camera, and began making short films. His first featured
frolicking dogs in Central Park, and they quickly grew more complex.
Within a few years, he had cast his father as a mummy who escapes from a
museum in a special-effects extravaganza that was shown at a film festival
in Albany.

During his high school years, Liman took courses at the International
School of Photography, but he also
fell in with a fast crowd and ran afoul of the law after stealing a
traffic light. He entered Brown University in Rhode Island, where he
majored in history, but satisfied his creative urges by starting up a
college television network and hosting his own David Letterman-style show.
After earning his degree in 1988, he studied film at the University of
Southern California's film school before moving to Paris.

It was there that Liman became captivated by the films of Luc Besson,
which began when he went to a showing of
La Femme Nikita
. He heeded a friend's suggestion to check out Besson's
other works, among them 1985's
Subway
and 1988's
Le Grand Bleu
. Liman singled out the latter—a deep-sea thriller—as his
all-time favorite movie in an interview with the
Sunday Telegraph
. "I've got a short attention span, so it makes sense that I
like movies, because for the most part they immerse you in lots of
action," he told the London paper's Mark Monahan.
"But this is a movie that—in the long [163-minute]
version—doesn't have that much happening. I was just
riveted, and I couldn't believe how riveted I was, given that there
were no guns or villains. So little was happening, and it was such a
simple story."

Liman made his directorial debut with a forgotten medical-school murder
mystery,
Getting In
, that featured yet-to-be-famous actors Dave Chappelle, Matthew Perry, and
Calista Flockhart. The 1994 movie was never released, and Liman put it
behind him and began work on his next project. Written by a struggling
Hollywood actor named Jon Favreau, the movie's script focused on
four young entertainment-industry hopefuls in Los Angeles and was shot for
just $250,000. Favreau played one of the leads, the self-esteem-deficient
Mike, who is wary of the dating advice doled out by his fast-talking
buddy, played by Vince Vaughn.

Swingers
premiered at the 1996 Toronto International Film Festival and was picked
up for distribution by Miramax. Within six months it had made stars of
both Favreau and Vaughn, grossed $4.5 million at the box office, and
introduced the phrase "You're so money" to the
vernacular. It also secured Liman's status as one of
Hollywood's hottest new directors. Critics showered it with praise,
with
Entertainment Weekly
—which later named it as one of the year's ten best
movies—asserting that Liman "captures something hilarious
and touching—a new attitude of wistful modesty on the part of young
macho cruisers, a recognition that what works today is raw testosterone in
a velvet glove," noted the reviewer, Owen Gleiberman.

Writing in the
New York Times
, Janet Maslin called
Swingers
"irresistible" and claimed that "just watching Mike
feigning savoir-faire, bar hopping with his friends and failing
spectacularly with women, is enough to keep the film buoyantly
entertaining."
Time
critic Richard Corliss liked the way the movie "bends to the mood
of each scene. Liman knows where the human comedy in Favreau's
engaging script is: at the edges of the film frame, in the taut corners of
a sensitive loser's mouth, in an unheard 'I love you'
(the film's subtle climactic shocker) on the other end of a phone
line."

Despite his new status in Hollywood, Liman did not make another film for
three years. The hiatus was voluntary, for Arthur Liman had been diagnosed
with cancer and Liman wanted to spend time with him before his passing in
July of 1997. The esteemed corporate attorney had not initially approved
of his son's career choice, Liman admitted two years later to Ruthe
Stein in an interview for the
San Francisco Chronicle
. "I had a really huge argument with him about it. He thought I was
asking for too rough a life," the filmmaker said. "But
nonetheless he was incredibly supportive. He helped me raise the money for
Swingers
and did all the legal work."

Liman's next work quickly became a minor cult classic and earned
him comparisons to indie director Quentin Tarantino. The film was
Go
, released in 1999, and it featured a cast of future stars who were
generally known only to teenage television audiences at the time. For a
$6.5 million budget, Liman hired Sarah Polley, a former child actress
whose credits included the
Road to Avonlea
series;
Dawson's Creek
star Katie Holmes; and Scott Wolf from
Party of Five
. The ensemble also included Taye Diggs and Jay Mohr, all of whom are
involved in one way or another in a drug deal gone awry. The story is told
in three separate vignettes, from the points of view of three different
characters, and begins with Polley's Ronna agreeing to help a
couple of soap-opera actors (Wolf and Mohr) score some Ecstasy. Subplots
revolve around Holmes' character, Claire, who is held as collateral
in the dealer's apartment, a stolen credit card, a side jaunt to
Las Vegas, the shooting of a strip-club bouncer, and a sinister cop who
seems to have designs on the actors. "The movie is rather too
frolicsome about drug use," noted Corliss in
Time
, "but it carries an internal message: If you're on dope,
you won't be able to follow the plot."

Go
earned Liman overwhelming critical acclaim. Corliss went on to deem it a
picture "with a heart so understanding that it lets nobody
die."
Entertainment Weekly
's Gleiberman called it "the one truly thrilling movie
I've seen so far this year…. Everyone on screen is out for
kicks, and so is Liman, who
seems to be staring, entranced, right along with the audience, as if
he'd staged each scene simply because he had to watch it."

Liman's next work,
The Bourne Identity
, came with an astonishing $75 million budget and starred Matt Damon in
the title role as an amnesia-suffering CIA killer on the run in Europe.
Adapted from Robert Ludlum's 1980 best-seller, the movie took
months to make and had Liman battling with studio executives over various
production-related issues as well as script changes for the final third.
He managed to win one major decision in his casting of Franka Potente (
Run Lola Run
) as Bourne's unwitting accomplice. Critics were divided over the
end result, with some hailing Damon as the unlikeliest new action hero and
others deriding Liman for cashing in on his reputation and becoming just
another big-budget Hollywood director. Writing in the
Village Voice
, J. Hoberman found it improbable that Damon's Bourne manages to
"instantly escalate from clean-cut Joe College to trilingual,
unstoppable action-escape commando killing machine," and asserted
that in the director's third major film he "takes a giant
step toward hackdom."

Other reviewers gave
The Bourne Identity
better marks. "Liman intentionally walks a careful line,"
noted Mick LaSalle in the
San Francisco Chronicle
. "He plays it straight enough that the movie generates the
suspense of a traditional thriller, but he keeps one toe and sometimes two
in the zone of farce. The result is not only entertaining but also
refreshing, a shameless crowd-pleaser with a healthy cynicism about
itself." Writing in the
New York Times
, Manohla Dargis echoed past reviewers of Liman's work in asserting
that the director had a deft talent for making his characters and their
actions empathetic. "It's funny when the amnesiac Bourne
realizes he speaks German and can throw a mean punch," she
remarked, "it's unexpectedly affecting when the woman
he's with vomits after she sees another man violently die."

Liman did not have to rely entirely on his rankings in the Hollywood
opening-weekend numbers race, however, in order to have steady work. He
was a partner in Hypnotic, Inc., a production company involved in
The Bourne Identity
as well as the hit WB series
The O.C.
during its first season; Liman directed the pilot episode of the
phenomenally successful series. Hypnotic also had a piece of the
Bourne
franchise, which included a 2004 sequel—
The Bourne Supremacy
, directed by Paul Green-grass—and a planned entry for 2007,
The Bourne Ultimatum
. He also served as executive producer for the much-lauded FOX series
Arrested Development
.

Liman signed on for his next project,
Mr. & Mrs. Smith
, after his hiring received the green light from its star, Brad Pitt. The
comedy-action flick would be forever known, however, as the project that
spelled the end of Pitt's marriage to Jennifer Aniston when rumors
of his on-set romance with co-star Angelina Jolie proved true once the
movie was released in June of 2005. Liman's leads played a pair of
trained assassins who fell in love, settled into suburban ennui, and then
each receive assignments to carry out a hit on the other. Reviews for
Mr. & Mrs. Smith
were mixed. "It's a high-wire act, pitched above a gaping
chasm of implausibility, and the remarkable thing is how well Liman
… and his red-hot stars sustain the joke," wrote David Ansen
in
Newsweek
. "It's preposterous, but Liman gives it such a seductive,
playfully hip texture that you happily embrace the fantasy."

Liman's subsequent projects included a series for NBC that debuted
in March of 2006,
Heist
, for which he served as executive producer and pilot-episode director,
and a television version of
Mr. & Mrs. Smith
. His next film,
Jumper
, was scheduled for a 2007 release. It was planned as the first in trilogy
about a teen able to teleport himself to other realms. Liman has said that
after having been a filmmaker nearly his entire life, the job never really
became any easier for him. "When you're in fifth grade and
making a 25-minute effects film, you're brilliant just for having
done it," he explained to Sheila Johnston in London's
Guardian
newspaper. "That was one of the transitions I had to go through
when I went to Hollywood—it was no longer special just to be
shooting a film, you had to make good ones."